ECON CPI comes in flaming!

Valann

Contributing Member
DOW currently down 500 pts as CPI comes in hotter than expected.

The consumer price index accelerated at a faster-than-expected pace in March, pushing inflation higher and likely dashing hopes that the Federal Reserve will be able to cut interest rates anytime soon.
The CPI, a broad measure of goods and services costs across the economy, rose 0.4% for the month, putting the 12-month inflation rate at 3.5%, or 0.3 percentage point higher than in February, the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for a 0.3% gain and a 3.4% year-over-year level.

Excluding volatile food and energy components, core CPI also accelerated 0.4% on a monthly basis while rising 3.8% from a year ago, compared with respective estimates for 0.3% and 3.7%.

Stock market futures slumped after the report while Treasury yields spiked higher.
Shelter and energy costs drove the increase on the all-items index.
Energy rose 1.1% after climbing 2.3% in February, while shelter costs, which make up about one-third of the weighting in the CPI, were higher by 0.4% on the month and up 5.7% from a year ago. Expectations for shelter-related costs to decelerate through the year have been central to the Fed’s thesis that inflation will cool enough to allow for interest rate cuts.
Food prices increased just 0.1% on the month and were up 2.2% on a year-over-year basis. There were some big gains within the food category, however.

The measure for meat, fish, poultry and eggs climbed 0.9%, pushed by a 4.6% jump in egg prices. Butter fell 5% and cereal and bakery products declined by 0.9%. Food away from home increased 0.3%.
Elsewhere, used vehicle prices fell 1.1% and medical care services prices rose 0.6%.

The report comes with markets on edge and Fed officials expressing caution about the near-term direction for monetary policy. Central bank policymakers have repeatedly called for patience on cutting rates, saying they have not seen enough evidence that inflation is on a solid path back to their 2% annual goal. The March report likely confirmed worries that inflation is stickier than expected.
Markets had expected the Fed to start cutting interest rates in June with three reductions in total expected this year, but that shifted dramatically following the release. Traders in the fed funds futures market pushed expectations for the first cut out to September, according to CME Group calculations.
“There’s not much you can point to that this is going to result in a shift away from the hawkish bent” from Fed officials, said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab. “June to me is definitely off the table.”
The Fed also expects services inflation to ease through the year, but that has shown to be stubborn as well. Excluding energy, the services index increased 0.5% in March and was at a 5.4% annual rate, inconsistent with the Fed’s target.
This marks the third consecutive strong reading and means that the stalled disinflationary narrative can no longer be called a blip,” said Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management. “In fact, even if inflation were to cool next month to a more comfortable reading, there is likely sufficient caution within the Fed now to mean that a July cut may also be a stretch, by which point the US election will begin to intrude with Fed decision making.”
Later Wednesday, the Fed will release minutes from its March meeting, providing more insight into where officials stand on monetary policy.
Multiple Fed officials in recent days have expressed skepticism about lowering rates. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic told CNBC that he expects just one cut this year, likely not coming until the fourth quarter. Governor Michelle Bowman said an increase may even be necessary if the data does not cooperate.
 

Jeff Allen

Producer
"flaming" is .8 vs .5?? Is this Idiocracy in action? We all know the number is a lie anyway, 3.5 or 3.8 is still at least off by a margin of 3+%.
The hyper language gets so tiring and makes people look absolutely moronic.
Dollar still has 1-2% left of its value to be destroyed, enjoy the trip!

J
 

Valann

Contributing Member
While CPI inflation is at 3.5%, inflation is much higher in many basic necessities:
1. Car Insurance Inflation: 22.2%
2. Transportation Inflation: 10.7%
3. Car Repair Inflation: 8.2%
4. Hospital Services Inflation: 7.5%
5. Homeowner Inflation: 5.9%
6. Rent Inflation: 5.7%
7. Electricity Inflation: 5.0%
8. Food Away From Home Inflation:

4.2% Both Core CPI and headline CPI came in hotter than expectations. This is FOURTH straight month with both readings being hotter than expected. We now have all major inflation metrics back on the rise and oil prices are nearly $90. Affordability is still getting worse.
View: https://twitter.com/KobeissiLetter/status/1778044736030253396
 

Bps1691

Veteran Member
"flaming" is .8 vs .5?? Is this Idiocracy in action? We all know the number is a lie anyway, 3.5 or 3.8 is still at least off by a margin of 3+%.
The hyper language gets so tiring and makes people look absolutely moronic.
Dollar still has 1-2% left of its value to be destroyed, enjoy the trip!

J
Closest to the truth generally available:

Shadow Statistics:

Based on the way it was CALCULATED in 1990

alt-cpi-home2.gif


Based upon the way it was calculated in 1980

sgs-cpi.gif
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

"Obviously, This Is Very Bad News For Biden": Wall Street Reacts To Today's Red Hot Inflation Print​


BY TYLER DURDEN
WEDNESDAY, APR 10, 2024 - 09:36 AM
Coming into today's CPI number, which followed three previous red-hot inflation prints, we said that it's time for a "miss" (the first of 2024) not because the data demands it - on the contrary, prices continue to rise at a frightening pace - but because a dovish CPI print today would be the last opportunity for the Fed to set a timetable for a rate cut calendar ahead of November's election.
Well, you can wave goodbye to all that, because we just got the 4th consecutive "inflation beat" in a row...




... with supercore inflation coming in blazing hot...



... thanks to a boiling inflation print which saw every single CPI metric coming in hotter than expected - was a shock, not because it reflected reality, but because it effectively sealed Biden's fate because as Bloomberg's Chris Antsey writes, "obviously, this is very bad news for Joe Biden... we’re approaching the point where high inflation is bound to still be in voters’ minds when they head to the polls, regardless of how the price figures come in over summer."

With that in mind, here is a snapshot of kneejerk reactions by various other Wall Street economists and strategists to today's print courtesy of Bloomberg.

Morgan Stanley economist Ellen Zentner is the first sellside to warn her June rate-cut call is in jeopardy:

“The upside surprise in core CPI is moving the inflation data further away from the convincing evidence the Fed needs to start cutting in June. Dependent on the PPI data tomorrow, this print tilts the Fed toward a later start to the cutting cycle than our current forecast for June.”

Brian Coulton, chief economist at Fitch:

“The so-called ‘Super-core’ CPI measure – services excluding rents – jumped from 3.9% y/y in February to 4.8% in March. This latter metric is heading the wrong way and quite quickly at that.”
David Kelly, Chief Global Strategist at JPMorgan asset management:

“I wish the Federal Reserve would pay more attention to what they do to financial markets with their manipulation of interest rates and not worry too much about what they are doing to the economy. Last decade, we mispriced housing terribly and now a large chunk of younger Americans can’t buy a house.”
Anna Wong, Bloomberg economist:

“March is a month where the CPI enters a seasonal window that’s favorable for disinflation. The fact that core CPI remained the same in March as February — even if it maps to about 0.3% in core PCE inflation terms – is not a good development. This report, more than February’s, is likely to feed Fed concern that progress on disinflation is stalling — even though the core print for the two months was the same.”
Marvin Loh, State Street economist:


“While the rent component shows a strong disinflationary trend, the more important owner’s occupied component is stubbornly unchanged and well above what is needed to get towards a stable 2% level.”


productivity in the US economy as people found new jobs where they’re a better fit. Higher government spending would also push up the neutral rate of interest. But every time we get a hot indicator, the case builds that it has happened and that conventional measures of neutral interest rates are too low. If that is the case, the upshot is higher yields and a flatter curve, because not only would the Fed be able to cut by less than expected in the short term, but yields will need to be higher in the long term too."
Finally, we conclude where we started, and echoing what we said in our CPI preview, namely that the BLS had Biden's fate in its hands, it appears the bureaucrats just voted for Trump. Here is BBG's Chris Antsey:

Obviously, this is very bad news for Joe Biden. It’s still only April, and we’ll have another half-a-year’s worth of inflation reports before the election. But we’re approaching the point where high inflation is bound to still be in voters’ minds when they head to the polls, regardless of how the price figures come in over summer.
To underscore how calamitous today's data is for Biden, here also is BBG's Enda Curran:

Let’s be clear -- today’s data has both economic and political implications. The economics are straight forward: It looks unlikely that the Fed will be cutting rates near term (barring a shock). The political implications are less clear but no less meaningful: Poll after poll has found that voters are grumpy on the economy and news that it could be a while yet before the inflation story is over won’t brighten their mood.
And with Biden's goose now thoroughly cooked, the next question is how long before somebody raises the possibility of a rate hike.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
I was just listening Adam Taggart interviewing someone who believes that the only area of the market that is undervalued is commodities.

If that should take off then the inflation will just continue to increase.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
...there was once a time when "Dow Down 500 Points" would have been canned-food-and-shotguns time.

Today it's a 1% loss, a hiccup.
Now they often don't say down by a number, they use a point. Dow's down three quarter points.....most have no idea what that means. Like the CPI, the rules keep changing.
 

Squid

Veteran Member
The 3.5 was fairly predictable. Small change month falling off, massive food driven by mainly Cocoa but also Sugar and Coffee, and bumps in oil and gas all but locked in higher CPI.

The market has been delusional thinking Fed would cut possibly as early as March, oops we mean May, err July, uh August???? The recent market charge higher since November was the combination of AI hype and the thought of more free money.

Maybe ‘higher for longer’ actually means higher for longer. If the market corrects (note corrects not tanks) then the next 2-3 months may be interesting times.

The Fed will likely now be switching to unemployment number watching to determine when they might actually cut. My feelings are the boomer retirements are still propping up the idea that unemployment numbers would be higher if the retirements didn’t suppress (hide?) the true state. Also the government jobs for the last 6+ months have been reported high, then magically corrected down the following months.

My broken crystal ball guess is, lay-offs rise, unemployment jumps, Fed cuts rates and we go from goldilocks to recession countdown.

If the Fed gets it wrong the economy slows and lay-offs lead to more lay-offs.

As one of my favorite college business teachers used to remind us, your job is temporary.
 

Jeff Allen

Producer
I'm curious, does anyone think the market can truly crash?
Isn't the whole point of the mysterious plunge protection team to pump in billions as needed?
I wonder...if we were to experience a true '29 crash, does it get so bad the lights go out and everyone kicks the bucket? Perhaps the PPT serves a vital function to humanity? People are so overextended.....how would the banks even deal with 30+% unemployment with something north of 50% of all debt bankrupting?
I wonder how many on this forum are completely debt free? (I'm not, but could write a check to wipe out whats left of our real estate debt). I suspect whatever the debt number is with members here, its significantly less than the general population....I mean the number of 100,000 pickup trucks is completely nuts! Most are insanely broke...

J
 
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